F.B.I. Detective Stories was introduced in February 1949 and ran on a regular bimonthly schedule for 14 issuesquite a long life for a magazine about The Feds, particularly at a time when the general trend was long past. (Pub. Info.)

The Feds was Street & Smiths attempt to cash in on the fad for G-Men stories inspired by the Jimmy Cagney movie Public Enemy. It was never very successful and folded after a mere fifteen issues. (Pub. Info.)

Pulp magazine that reprinted remaindered copies of various Canadian pulps of various genres. Note that the Spring 1942 issue has been seen with variant contents so the following should be regarded as an illustrative sample only. (Pub. Info.)

One of the Nickel Series of magazines, along with Five-Cent Adventures, Five-Cent Flying Stories and Five-Cent Western published in 1932. Nothing else is known about the magazine which is believed to have lasted for only 1 issue. (Pub. Info.)

A reprint magazine selecting mostly from other Standard Magazines of the late 1930s/early 1940s but later from American Magazine and Black Mask. Some sources list an 18th issue, Winter 1954, but Cook/Miller state this does not exist. (Pub. Info.)

Under a variety of titles Flynns (Weekly) (Detective) (Fiction) (Magazine) was one of the most popular, and longest running, of all the detective pulpsnotching up an impressive 929 issues over a period of 28 years, maintaining a rigid publication schedule for 17 of those years.